Support allocation failures when interpreting MIR
This closes#79601 by handling the case where memory allocation fails during MIR interpretation, and translates that failure into an `InterpError`. The error message is "tried to allocate more memory than available to compiler" to make it clear that the memory shortage is happening at compile-time by the compiler itself, and that it is not a runtime issue.
Now that memory allocation can fail, it would be neat if Miri could simulate low-memory devices to make it easy to see how much memory a Rust program needs.
Note that this breaks Miri because it assumes that allocation can never fail.
Remove the deprecated `core::raw` and `std::raw` module.
A few months has passed since #84207. I think now it's time for the final removal.
Closes#27751.
r? `@m-ou-se`
Return `EvaluatedToOk` when type in outlives predicate is global
A global type doesn't reference any local regions or types, so it's
guaranteed to outlive any region.
deny using default function in impl const Trait
Fixes#79450.
I don't know if my implementation is correct:
- The check is in `rustc_passes::check_const`, should I put it somewhere else instead?
- Is my approach (to checking the impl) optimal? It works for the current tests, but it might have some issues or there might be a better way of doing this.
Fix const-generics ICE related to binding
Fixes#83765, fixes#85848
r? `@jackh726` as you're familiar with `Binding`. I'd like to get some views if the current approach is right path.
Add a help message to `unused_doc_comments` lint
Fixes#83492
This adds a help message to suggest a plain comment like the E0658 error. I've yet to come up with the best message about the doc attribute but the current shouldn't harm anything.
I was thinking of recovering in the `doc_comment_between_if_else` case, but I came to the conclusion that it unlikely happened and was an overkill.
Redefine `ErrorKind::Other` and stop using it in std.
This implements the idea I shared yesterday in the libs meeting when we were discussing how to handle adding new `ErrorKind`s to the standard library: This redefines `Other` to be for *user defined errors only*, and changes all uses of `Other` in the standard library to a `#[doc(hidden)]` and permanently `#[unstable]` `ErrorKind` that users can not match on. This ensures that adding `ErrorKind`s at a later point in time is not a breaking change, since the user couldn't match on these errors anyway. This way, we use the `#[non_exhaustive]` property of the enum in a more effective way.
Open questions:
- How do we check this change doesn't cause too much breakage? Will a crate run help and be enough?
- How do we ensure we don't accidentally start using `Other` again in the standard library? We don't have a `pub(not crate)` or `#[deprecated(in this crate only)]`.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79965
cc `@rust-lang/libs` `@ijackson`
r? `@dtolnay`
Test for const trait impls behind feature gates
- Make the previous cross-crate tests use revisions instead of being separate files
- Added test for gating const trait impls.
cc ``@oli-obk`` ``@jonas-schievink``
Check the number of generic lifetime and const parameters of intrinsics
This pull request fixes#85855. The current code for type checking intrinsics only checks the number of generic _type_ parameters, but does not check for an incorrect number of lifetime or const parameters, which can cause problems later on, such as the ICE in #85855, where the code thought that it was looking at a type parameter but found a lifetime parameter:
```
error: internal compiler error: compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/generics.rs:188:18:
expected type parameter, but found another generic parameter
```
The changes in this PR add checks for the number of lifetime and const parameters, expand the scope of `E0094` to also apply to these cases, and improve the error message by properly pluralizing the number of expected generic parameters.
Fix misleading "impl Trait" error
The kinds can't be compared directly, as types with references are treated as different because the lifetimes aren't bound in ty, but are in expected.
Closes#84160
Fix ICE when `main` is declared in an `extern` block
Changes in #84401 to implement `imported_main` changed how the crate entry point is found, and a declared `main` in an `extern` block was detected erroneously. This was causing the ICE described in #86110.
This PR adds a check for this case and emits an error instead. Previously a `main` declaration in an `extern` block was not detected as an entry point at all, so emitting an error shouldn't break anything that worked previously. In 1.52.1 stable this is demonstrated, with a `` `main` function not found`` error.
Fixes#86110
Test cross-crate usage of `feature(const_trait_impl)`
This PR does two things:
- Fixes metadata not encoded properly for functions in const trait impls.
- Adds tests for using const trait impls cross-crate with the feature gate on the user crate either enabled or disabled.
AFAIK, this means we can now constify some trait impls in the standard library 🎉
See #67792 for the tracking issue, cc `@oli-obk`
Check node kind to avoid ICE in `check_expr_return()`
This PR fixes#86721. The ICE described there is apparently due to a misunderstanding:
e98897e5dc/compiler/rustc_typeck/src/check/expr.rs (L684-L685)
Intuitively, one would think that calling `expect_item()` after `get_parent_item()` should succeed, but as it turns out, `get_parent_item()` can also return foreign, trait, and impl items as well as crates, whereas `expect_item()` specifically expects a `Node::Item`. I have therefore added an extra check to prevent this ICE.
Only include lint in future_incompatible lint group if not an edition lint
A follow up to #86330 - this only includes lints annotated with `FutureIncompatibleInfo` in the `future_incompatibile` lint group if the future compatibility is not tied to an edition.
We probably want to rename `FutureIncompatibleInfo` to something else since this type is now used to indicate future breakages of all kinds (even those that happen in editions). I'd prefer to do that in a separate PR though.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Change vtable memory representation to use tcx allocated allocations.
This fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86324. However i suspect there's more to change before it can land.
r? `@bjorn3`
cc `@rust-lang/miri`
Fix garbled suggestion for missing lifetime specifier
This PR fixes#86667. The suggestion code currently checks whether there is a generic parameter that is not a synthetic `impl Trait` parameter and, if so, suggests to insert a new lifetime `'a` before that generic parameter. However, it does not make sense to insert `'a` in front of an elided lifetime parameter, since these are synthetic as well, which leads to the garbled suggestion in #86667.
Turn non_fmt_panic into a future_incompatible edition lint.
This turns the `non_fmt_panic` lint into a future_incompatible edition lint, so it becomes part of the `rust_2021_compatibility` group. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85894.
This lint produces both warnings about semantical changes (e.g. `panic!("{{")`) and things that will become hard errors (e.g. `panic!("{")`). So I added a `explain_reason: false` that supresses the default "this will become a hard error" or "the semantics will change" message, and instead added a note depending on the situation. (cc `@rylev)`
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Fix `future_prelude_collision` false positive
Fixes#86633
The lint for checking if method resolution of methods named `try_into` will fail in 2021 edition previously would fire on all inherent methods, however for inherent methods that consume `self`, this takes priority over `TryInto::try_into` due to being inherent, while trait method and methods that take `&self` or `&mut self` don't take priority, and thus aren't affected by this false positive.
This fix is rather simple: simply checking if the inherent method doesn't auto-deref or auto-ref (and thus takes `self`) and if so, prevents the lint from firing.
Don't run a publically reachable server in tests
This causes Windows Defender's firewall to pop up during tests to ask if I want to allow the test program to access the public Internet, since it was listening on `0.0.0.0` (the test passes regardless of how you respond to the modal, since the firewall only affects traffic outside of the computer, none of which actually happens in the test). The test server doesn't actually need to be publicly reachable, so this makes it so it is only reachable locally, which makes Windows Defender happy.
Fix type checking of return expressions outside of function bodies
This pull request fixes#86188. The problem is that the current code for type-checking `return` expressions stops if the `return` occurs outside of a function body, while the correct behavior is to continue type-checking the return value expression (otherwise an ICE happens later on because variables declared in the return value expression don't have a type).
Also, I have noticed that it is sometimes not obvious why a `return` is outside of a function body; for instance, in the example from #86188 (which currently causes an ICE):
```rust
fn main() {
[(); return || {
let tx;
}]
}
```
I have changed the error message to also explain why the `return` is considered outside of the function body:
```
error[E0572]: return statement outside of function body
--> ice0.rs:2:10
|
1 | / fn main() {
2 | | [(); return || {
| |__________^
3 | || let tx;
4 | || }]
| ||_____^ the return is part of this body...
5 | | }
| |_- ...not the enclosing function body
```